Wholesale Inventory Build Slows As Sales Miss 3rd Month In A Row

Wholesale inventory growth slowed to 0.5% (for Feb) from a revised 0.8% pick up in January but met expectations as it seems the much-hoped for weather recovery remains missing in action. This is the 2nd slowest rate of inventory increase in 7 months. Wholesale Sales did bounce back from the utter collapse last month but not as much as expected – rising 0.7% vs 1.0% expectations – missing for the 3rd month in a row. The combination leaves inventory/sales overall at its highest in 16 months.

 




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La Quandy Crush

Oops. Another day, another failed IPO. Private equity group Blackstone’s darling La Quinta IPO’d at $17 last night raising $650 million (at a multiple of 47 times last year’s earnings). This was already below the low end of the range ($18 to $21) but this morning’s open shows it seems the ‘public’ is not buying the hyper-growth story anymore….

 




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Russia And China About To Sign “Holy Grail” Gas Deal

Several weeks ago we reported that in response to ongoing alienation of Russia by the west Putin was aggressively setting the stage for Russia’s eastward expansion, set to culminate with a “holy grail” gas deal with China. We said that “while Europe is furiously scrambling to find alternative sources of energy should Gazprom pull the plug on natgas exports to Germany and Europe (the imminent surge in Ukraine gas prices by 40% is probably the best indication of what the outcome would be), Russia is preparing the announcement of the “Holy Grail” energy deal with none other than China, a move which would send geopolitical shockwaves around the world and bind the two nations in a commodity-backed axis.”

Reuters added, reflecting on the recent trip of Rosneft executive chairman to Asia, that “the underlying message from the head of Russia’s biggest oil company, Rosneft, was clear: If Europe and the United States isolate Russia, Moscow will look East for new business, energy deals, military contracts and political alliances.  The Holy Grail for Moscow is a natural gas supply deal with China that is apparently now close after years of negotiations. If it can be signed when Putin visits China in May, he will be able to hold it up to show that global power has shifted eastwards and he does not need the West.”

It’s time for an update. According to Itar-Tass, “Russia’s Gazprom and China are poised to conclude a gas supply contract in coming weeks, the first in a series of energy projects planned between the two countries. “We’re working now to sign a gas contract in May,” said Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich. “Consultations are continuing and Gazprom’s leaders are holding talks with Chinese partners on the contract terms. We hope to conclude the contract in May and believe it should come into effect by the year end.”

The key sticking point remains the price: “Base price is the only problem to be solved,” Dvorkovich said on Wednesday at a session of a Russia-China intergovernmental commission on energy co-operation, co-chaired by Chinese Vice-Premier Zhang Gaoli.” However, even if Russia concedes the topline to China, it will surely “more than make up for it in volume” to borrow a line from Amazon, and furthermore the geopolitical implications from such a deal, not to mention the increase in national leverage vis-a-vis its dealings with Europe and the West, will more than make up for any immediately revenue shortfalls.

But wait – there’s more in the rapidly shifting geopolitical axis which increasingly positions Russias as a key commodity source for China:

In other plans, Russian company Novatek’s Yamal region LNG (liquefied natural gas) project was near ready for signing, Drovkovich said. Russia’s Rosneft had several interesting plans “seeking to increase maritime supplies by several million tonnes per year,” he said.

 

“Russia and China have agreed to jointly develop gas fields in (Russia’s far eastern) Sakhalin and East Siberia,” Dvorkovich said. “We have discussed co-operation in the coal sphere, agreeing to develop deposits, supply equipment and build electric power plants as well as providing China with additional electricity supplies”.

 

“We’re finding mutually advantageous decisions on certain projects that will allow us to implement them in the shortest period of time,” Dvorkovich added. Conditions were right to speed the Tianjin oil refinery project and to build a petrochemical facility, he said.

This is happening as Ukraine announced overnight that it won’t import Russian gas in April due to the surge in price that Gazprom is demanding from the US proxy state, and following ongoing Gazprom invoiving of how much Ukraine owes it which at last count was well over $2 billion – an amount which we be funded from the still to be finalized western aid to be provided for Ukraine.

Of course, at this pace, Ukraine and even Europe, will become far less meaningful markets to Russia as Putin prepares to announce what indeed would be the holy grail of gas supply deals, one that reduces Russia’s reliance on European energy imports and substantially raises Russia’s relevance to China as the two countries increasingly become the bestest of buddies.

Which certainly is also why, as Bloomberg reported this morning, “in the talks between China and U.S.’s Hagel overnight, the Chinese are taking a different tack. Rather than argue the merits of the disputed islands/history, they seem instead to say that it’s none of the U.S. business to get mixed up in something in another part of the world and between two sovereign nations. 

Bloomberg’s conclusion: “Not only is this probably music to Putin’s ears, it also serves to ratchet up the tensions.”

Just wait to see how “ratcheted up” tensions will be once Russia and China are finally locked into a bearhug of mutual codependence.




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Greece To Issue First 5Y Bond Since Bailout At Lowest Yields Since 2009

For the first time since the bailout/restructuring, Greece will issue long-term debt to the public markets. These 5 year-term English Law bonds (which is entirely unsurprising given the total lack of protection local-law bonds suffered during the last restructuring) are expected to yield between 5 and 5.25%. That is modestly higher than Russia, below Mexico, and one-sixth of the yield investors demanded when the crisis was exploding. The secondary market has rallied to this entirely liquidity-fueled level leaving onlookers stunned (and likely Draghi et al. also). Greece must be ‘fixed’ right? Just don’t look at the chart below…

Greece is rated Caa3 by Moody’s Investors Service and B- by Standard & Poor’s Corp. and Fitch Ratings.

The commotion is US capital markets over huge IPO gains which are due more than anything to very small floats and major ‘get rich quick’ demand can also be found here as the issuance size is minimal leaving a world of yield chasers spying a European nation offering yields over 5% that is currently not rioting…

 

 

Claims that is the best example of positive sentiment and of a new normal are foolish – if nothing else, this is a sign of utter complacency and exuberance.

As WSJ reports, Greece is anything but fixed…

Even with the prospect of a recovery in sight, Greece’s economy is still in pain. Since its precrisis peak in 2008, the Greek economy has shrunk by a quarter in size, unemployment is at a staggering 27.5%, and standards of living—made worse by successive government cutbacks—have gone back by a decade or more.

 

On Tuesday, Greece’s two public sector umbrella unions—GSEE and ADEDY—staged yet another general strike over Greece’s austerity program, shuttering public sector services across the country.

We’ll leave it to BofA’s John Wraitch to sum it up…

“It seems everything is bulletproof even when you do get relatively bad news; people are prepared to look straight through it,”

 

“People are still hunting for yield and in the absence of any more material rise in safe-haven yields that means turning to bond markets that a more rational evaluation might lead you to be cautious about.”

Greek officials are crowing and will announce results tomorrow…

  • *GREECE TO ANNOUNCE BOND-SALE RESULT IN 24 HOURS: GREEK OFFICIAL
  • *GREECE’S BOND-SALE TARGET IS EU2.5 BLN: GREEK OFFICIAL
  • *GREECE’S BOND SALE AIMS TO FILL GAP IN YIELD CURVE: OFFICIAL
  • *GREECE EXPECTS BOND SALE TO HELP LOWER T-BILL RATES: OFFICIAL
  • *GREECE HAS `STRONG DEMAND’ FOR BOND SALE: GREEK OFFICIAL




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Instapundit: Meet The New Oligarchs, Same as the Old Oligarchs

Glenn Reynolds surveys data
about declining public trust in social media and tech companies and
concludes that the cyber-chickens are coming home to roost.

It’s made worse by the increasing politicization of Silicon
Valley, and the transformation of its leaders from rebels into what
Joel Kotkin calls “the new oligarchs,” people who once talked about
technology as liberation, but who now seem more interested in using
technology as an instrument of control. It’s not just NSA spying;
it’s that the companies gather data on everyone, with comparatively
little legal oversight.

You might have been OK with that a decade or two ago, when
Silicon Valley seemed full of people who would stand up to the Man.
Now, they are The Man (or The Woman) in many ways, or in cahoots
with them. Might the information you gave to OKCupid be
used against you someday? Your only protection, really, is their
good nature. And how good is that?


Read the whole thing.

And then read Instapundit’s excellent “5
Privacy Laws I Would Put on the Books Right Now
.” Snippet:

4. Emphasize Reciprocity

Private citizens should be entitled to do anything that
government entities can do without a warrant. For example, when I’m
out in public anyone can see my license plates. But I’ll bet that
police or prosecutors or judges would object if I started tracking
their “public” movements everywhere they went. If they can fly a
drone over my backyard without a warrant, then I should be able to
do the same to them. Government officials should have no more
protection from that sort of thing than the rest of us. This will
encourage both more transparency and a more serious attention to
privacy. 

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1% Of US Doctors Account For Over $10 Billion Of Medicare Billings

The top 1% of 825,000 individual medical providers accounted for 14% of the $77 billion in medicare billing in 2012, according to new federal data reported by the WSJ. The data shows a very small number of doctors and medical providers account for a huge amount of the costs for treating the elderly and, as WSJ notes, suggest in some cases, may be enriching themselves in the process. As Bloomberg notes, one doctor, who treats degenerative eye disease in seniors, was paid $21 million (twice the 2nd highest paid doctor on the list) with some top earners making 100 times the average for their respective fields. One researcher summed it up, “There’s all sorts of services that are low-value for patients, high-revenue to providers,” and leaves us wondering, once again, how the government will manage as Obamacare’s “success” washes ashore.

 

 

Top-down the data is concerning (but sadly reflects on the broad economy’s inequalities)

A tiny sliver of doctors and other medical providers accounted for an outsize portion of Medicare’s 2012 costs, according to an analysis of federal data that lays out details of physicians’ billings.

 

The top 1% of 825,000 individual medical providers accounted for 14% of the $77 billion in billing recorded in the data.

 

Medicare paid 344 physicians and other health providers more than $3 million each in 2012. Collectively, the 1,000 highest-paid Medicare doctors received $3.05 billion in payments.

Which, as WSJ notes, exposes some grave concerns…

The long-awaited data reveal for the first time how individual medical providers treat America’s seniors—and, in some cases, may enrich themselves in the process. Still, there are gaps in the records released by the U.S. about physicians’ practice patterns, and doctors’ groups said the release of such data leaves innocent physicians open to unfair criticism.

 

 

One-third of those top-earning providers are ophthalmologists, and one in 10 are radiation oncologists. Both specialties were singled out in a late 2013 report by the inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services urging greater scrutiny of doctors who consistently receive large Medicare payments.

 

 

“There’s all sorts of services that are low-value for patients, high-revenue to providers,” said Elliott Fisher, a Dartmouth University researcher who studies variation in health-care practice between doctors and places. The new data “will show some meaningful things about the high outliers,” Dr. Fisher said.

And some specific cases (as Bloomberg notes)

A doctor who treats a degenerative eye disease in seniors was paid $21 million by Medicare in 2012, twice the amount received by the next ophthalmologist on a list of 880,000 medical providers released by the government.

 

Salomon Melgen, a Florida ophthalmologist who specializes in injections for age-related macular degeneration, was paid $20,827,341 in 2012, or 64 times the average in his field, the data show. His appeal of a 2009 ruling that found he overbilled Medicare by $8.9 million was rejected last year. Farid Fata, a Michigan oncologist paid $10,063,281 in 2012, was charged with Medicare fraud in August, according to court records. The data opens fresh questions about Medicare’s payment policies.

 

 

Two doctors listed, who together were paid about $30 million, spent time in court in 2013 on claims they defrauded the government. While Medicare fraud cases aren’t unusual, the data released will provide a new level of transparency into the agency practices that may force doctors to become more careful in how they bill for Medicare patients.

 

Other doctors that were highest paid included Asad Qamar, a cardiologist based in Ocala, Florida, who was paid $18,154,816 by Medicare in 2012. The next highest cardiologist was paid $4,499,469.

 

The third and fourth-highest paid doctors, Michael McGinnis and Franklin Cockerill, both pathologists, were paid $12,577,017 and $11,068,463 respectively in 2012.

 

Cockerill, who is based in Rochester, Minnesota, billed for 56,628 unique patients in the year, providing over a million services. McGinnis, based in Wrightstown, New Jersey, saw 33,154 patients. The two doctors are received more than twice the amount of the third highest paid pathologist, who received about $5 million in 2012 for 8,976 patients.

And to get a feel for most rewarding medical actions…

 

Source: Bloomberg




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Gold and Oil Rise As U.S. Russia Relations Deteriorate Sharply

 

Today’s AM fix was USD 1,309.75, EUR 949.92 & GBP 782.74 per ounce.               

Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,314.75, EUR 955.14 and GBP 786.90 per ounce.


Gold rose $12.30 or 0.95% yesterday to $1,308.80/oz. Silver gained $0.13 or 0.65% to $20.01/oz.   



NYMEX Crude in U.S. Dollars, Quarterly, 21 Years – (Thomson Reuters)
 

   

Russia and the U.S. are on a collision course after tensions flared anew in Ukraine, which is supporting gold.

Russian forces are deployed on the border and the U.S. says they’re concerned that Russia may be planning further incursions into eastern Ukraine after annexing Crimea. The Russian government said Ukraine’s crackdown on separatists in the east risks sparking civil war.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry accused Russia of using “special forces and agents” to spark unrest, as Ukrainian authorities sent security forces to Kharkiv to try to rid the country’s second biggest city of separatists.

 

In Luhansk, 330 kilometers southeast of Kharkiv, pro-Russian protesters who seized a building of Ukraine’s state security service took hostages, planted mines and made threats with explosives and weapons, according to the Ukrainian security forces. Early today, they said that talks led to the release of 51 hostages without violence or injuries.


Gold in U.S. Dollars – October, 2012 to April 9, 2014 (Weekly) – (Thomson Reuters)

Geopolitical unrest has prompted investors to buy oil and gold which rose overnight. Gold climbed to the highest price in almost two weeks while crude oil also rose.

Kerry said yesterday that additional sanctions targeting Russia’s energy, banking and mining industry are “all on the table” if Russia intervenes further in Ukraine.

 

North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said that any further Russian move into Ukraine “would be an historic mistake” and “a serious escalation.” He warned that “it’s obvious that the evolving security situation in Ukraine makes it necessary to review our defense plans.”


Russia has as many as 40,000 soldiers stationed along the frontier, according to the U.S. and NATO. Putin says they are conducting military exercises and will withdraw soon.


Russian President Vladmir Putin


According to reports in Russia’s RIA Novosti, Bank Rossiya, has introduced a new logo which is a gold ruble. Officials stated that the new logo, the golden badge of the Russian national currency will be officially adopted by Bank Rossiya. It will symbolize a sign of stability and security of the ruble gold reserves of the country.

Bank Rossiya has decided to work exclusively with the national currency, to cease foreign currency operations in response to U.S. sanctions imposed last week according to Reuters.

 

The golden logo is a symbol which will symbolize the rouble’s stability and its backing by the country’s gold reserves, the bank explained to Itar-Tass.  


Symbolism is important and Putin may be sending the U.S. a message in the aftermath of JPMorgan unilaterally deciding to block an official Russian wire transfer, regarding how they might use gold as geopolitical weapon should economic and currency wars deepen.


Educate Yourself About Owning Gold Safely – The 7 Key Allocated Gold Storage Must Haves

 




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Did Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s Reason Interview Sink Her at Brandeis?

Hat tip: Eric Dondero of
Libertarian Republican

After announcing that it would honor author and activist Ayaan
Hirsi Ali with an honorary doctorate, Brandeis University has
withdrawn
its offer
, partly due to statements she made during a
2007 Reason interview

Born in Somali and raised in Kenya, Hirsi Ali fled to the
Netherlands and became an outspoken critic of the treatment of
women under Islamic law. She wrote the screenplay for the 2004
short film “Submission” (watch online). The film’s
director, Theo Van Gogh, was stabbed to death on the streets of
Amsterdam by an Islamic fanatic and Hirsi Ali ultimately fled
Holland for the United States.

Various student and faculty groups at Brandeis protested and a
petition posted at Change.org quoted from Rogier van Bakel‘s
2007 Reason interview with Hirsi Ali. The petition, which
garnered 6,802 signatures as of this morning, argued that Hirsi Ali
engages in “hate speech” and as such is not worthy of an honorary
doctorate.

Rogier van Bakel quotes her as follows: “Jews should be
proselytizing about a God that you can quarrel with. Catholics
should be proselytizing about a God who is love….Those are lovely
concepts of God. They can’t compare to the fire-breathing Allah who
inspires jihadism and totalitarianism.” Van Bakel notes religions’
ability to bring about change for good: “Do you think Islam could
bring about similar social and political changes?” Ms. Hirsi Ali
responds, “Only if Islam is defeated.” Van Bakel asks, “Don’t you
mean defeating radical Islam?” To that she responds, “No. Islam,
period.” (Reason, 11-07)

How can an Administration of a University that prides itself on
social justice and acceptance of all make a decision that targets
and disrespects it’s own students? This is hurtful to the Muslim
students and the Brandeis community who stand for social
justice.


Read the petition here
.

Brandeis officials have issued a statement
that at best shows themselves to be completely ignorant of her
work, especially her best-selling autobiography, InfidelThey
claim
:

She is a compelling public figure and advocate for women’s
rights, and we respect and appreciate her work to protect and
defend the rights of women and girls throughout the world. That
said, we cannot overlook certain of her past statements that are
inconsistent with Brandeis University’s core values.  For all
concerned, we regret that we were not aware of these statements
earlier.

Yeah, whatevs. Try learning about this brand-new
resource called the Interweb. You can download a “browser” for it
for free from a company called Mozilla. Obviously, a
university is fully within its rights to give awards or not to
whomever it chooses, just as Mozilla is free to promote or not
whomever it wants to CEO. And the Heritage Foundation is
free
to quickly accept
the resignation
of policy scholars who are attacked in
the liberal media. As I wrote about the Brendan Eich affair, this
sort of controversy is only going to become more common as
technology empowers more actors to create pressure groups and as
our economic and social interactions become
more and more symbolic
. That’s a mixed bag, for sure, but just
like Internet piracy, it ain’t going away any time soon.

I don’t agree with Hirsi Ali’s unqualified condemnation of
Islam—in
the interview
with van Bakel, she says “there is no moderate
Islam” and calls for banning free speech about the religion—and I’m
not surprised that Brandeis caved at the first sign of trouble.

There is something particularly appalling about an institution
that is predicated upon the idea of free and open discourse
throwing in the towel so quickly. Either the people running the
school there are simply total ignoramuses or they are cowards who
refuse to defend their choice. Of course, they could be both. In
any case, the reputation of the school should suffer, both as a
place where ideas can discussed and where smart people congregate.
Who wants to be the first person to turn up far more dubious
recipients of Brandeis honorary degrees?

Hirsi Ali runs a foundation dedicated to the proposition that
“women everywhere, of all cultures, merit access to education and
basic human rights.” It focuses especially on the issues of female
genital mutilation and refugee status in the West of women fleeing
the worst sort of patriarchal political and social situations.
Read more about it here.
One of the great achievements of Infidel, in my opinion,
is its description of the brutal reality of female circumcision and
the ways in which the practice is often supported by women who have
been subjected to it. Infidel is a profound contribution
to feminist and libertarian discourse precisely to the extent that
it forces all of us in the “tolerant” West to check out assumptions
about the universality of our ideas regarding pluralism and the
possibility of peaceful coexistence.

And check out Reason‘s interview with Hirsi Ali, which
is relentlessly interesting and provocative. Here’s a snippet:

Reason: George Bush, not the most conciliatory
person in the world, has said on plenty of occasions that we are
not at war with Islam.

Hirsi Ali: If the most powerful man in the West
talks like that, then, without intending to, he’s making radical
Muslims think they’ve already won. There is no moderate Islam.
There are Muslims who are passive, who don’t all
follow the rules of Islam, but there’s really only one Islam,
defined as submission to the will of God. There’s nothing moderate
about it.

Reason: So when even a hard-line critic of
Islam such as Daniel Pipes says, “Radical Islam is the problem, but
moderate Islam is the solution,” he’s wrong?

Hirsi Ali: He’s wrong. Sorry about that.

Whole
thing here.

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A.M. Links: Eric Holder Says He Can Do What He Wants, Medicare Paying Millions of Dollars to Thousands of Doctors, Russia Denies Planning Invasion of Ukraine

  • whateva, i do what i wantAt a hearing of the House Judiciary Committee,
    Attorney General
    Eric Holder
    insisted he had a “vast amount of discretion” in
    deciding which federal laws to enforce and how to enforce
    them.
  • In the first such data released in more than 30 years,
    Medicare
    is shown to pay out at least $1 million a year to
    4,000 doctors. The average Medicare payout for a participating
    doctor is $77,000 a year.
  • Up to twenty students may be injured after reports of multiple
    stabbings at a Pittsburgh area
    high school.
  • Security researchers say they’ve found a massive breach of
    Internet security, which they have dubbed
    Heartbleed
    . Millions of passwords, credit card numbers, and
    other personal data may have been exposed for several years.
  • Brandeis University reversed its decision on awarding an
    honorary degree to the the Islam critic and women’s rights activist

    Ayaan Hirsi Ali
    after facing criticism about the commencement
    speaker.
  • Authorities in
    Ukraine
    promised to use force to remove demonstrators from
    government buildings, while Russia dismissed
    claims it was planning to invade the country.

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